Husband thought it was due to periodic references to someone's worst nightmares being in there... And if the entirety of all of the enemies the doctor had ever made were out there, then who was their worst nightmare?
I actually thought there would be another version of the doctor (later version) in there, too, not that they were going to take him and string him up.
River saying "Sorry Sweetie" at the very end makes me wonder what she was apologizing for... She said it when she looked out the door and saw the pandorica.
I'm still wondering how they're planning on resolving the Rory thing, though. He's "out of time", effectively, because he "never existed". So if all of these things were based on Amy's past and childhood (the books could still be found in her room, which is where they could have gotten these things from), and not on a direct contact with her mind (which I wonder how they would have done so to begin with), then how would they know about Rory? Maybe I missed something (we were watching the episode from a plane at 10K feet, and missed a few lines due to not being able to hear them over the jet engines), but how did Rory get plucked out of her memory if she doesn't remember him in a section of her brain accessible to herself, let alone anyone else? How would they have known enough about him to create him? And how would he be generated with his own memories if he never existed in time? The doctor is a special case in remembering him, because of what he is. But if Amy can't remember Rory, then how did they re-create Rory, complete with memories of Amy?
All right, I'm both confused and highly parenthetical today. ;)
no subject
Date: 2010-06-21 11:14 pm (UTC)I actually thought there would be another version of the doctor (later version) in there, too, not that they were going to take him and string him up.
River saying "Sorry Sweetie" at the very end makes me wonder what she was apologizing for... She said it when she looked out the door and saw the pandorica.
I'm still wondering how they're planning on resolving the Rory thing, though. He's "out of time", effectively, because he "never existed". So if all of these things were based on Amy's past and childhood (the books could still be found in her room, which is where they could have gotten these things from), and not on a direct contact with her mind (which I wonder how they would have done so to begin with), then how would they know about Rory? Maybe I missed something (we were watching the episode from a plane at 10K feet, and missed a few lines due to not being able to hear them over the jet engines), but how did Rory get plucked out of her memory if she doesn't remember him in a section of her brain accessible to herself, let alone anyone else? How would they have known enough about him to create him? And how would he be generated with his own memories if he never existed in time? The doctor is a special case in remembering him, because of what he is. But if Amy can't remember Rory, then how did they re-create Rory, complete with memories of Amy?
All right, I'm both confused and highly parenthetical today. ;)